OPINION
In March 1980, the grand jury returned a multiple-count indictment against defendants and two other persons, charging them with one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, and with several substantive counts of aiding and abetting mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. The case proceeded to a jury trial in late June 1980. At the conclusion of the government’s case, the court acquitted defendant Richard Allen as to all counts. The jury found Richard Allen’s brother, defendant Lee Allen, guilty on the conspiracy count and most of the substantive counts. In November 1981, the grand jury returned another indictment, this one against only these two defendants, charging them again with conspiracy to commit mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, and with mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. In the motions before the court, defendants contend that the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment bars their prosecution on the second indictment. Alternatively, they seek dismissal of the indictment pursuant to the court’s supervisory power over the administration of criminal justice. In light of the particular facts of this case, the court has concluded that the defendants’ arguments on both grounds are sound and that the motions must be granted.
*300 I. FACTS
From 1974 to 1978, the Hughes Aircraft Company at El Segundo, California (“Hughes”) was the subject of an illegal kickback scheme conducted through one of its purchasing departments. The government commenced an investigation into the scheme in early 1978 by interviewing several of the suspected participants. On May 17, 1978, one of those participants, Kenneth Lilly (“Lilly”), provided the government with a confession and a detailed description of the scheme’s operation. Lilly, a veteran employee of Hughes, was a purchasing agent for the company’s Radar Systems Group during the operation of the kickback scheme. Lilly informed government investigators that because of pressure from his departmental supervisor, defendant Lee Allen, he had purchased materials from certain Hughes suppliers at inflated prices. In so doing, he violated company policy requiring the use of competitive bids. Among the favored suppliers named by Lilly were companies operated by Jamie Tindall (“Tindall”), Roger Rinden (“Rinden”), and Samuel Mendelow (“Mendelow”). 1 According to Lilly, at the direction of Lee Allen, each of these suppliers, after payment by Hughes, was obligated to and did forward a percentage of its profits to defendant Richard Allen’s consulting firm.
Shortly after interviewing Lilly, the government interviewed the defendants, both of whom admitted at the outset that Richard Allen had had some type of business relationship with Tindall, Rinden, and Mendelow. Indeed, Richard Allen acknowledged that his consulting firm had accepted checks from those suppliers, although he claimed not to know precisely for what purpose the payments were made.
In October 1977, toward the end of the kickback scheme’s operation and prior to the government’s investigation, Lilly was transferred out of his position as buyer for the Radar Systems Group. His responsibilities were assumed by Lerner Watkins (“Watkins”). She informed investigators in January 1978 of efforts by Tindall, Rinden, and defendant Lee Allen to obtain her assistance in continuing the kickback scheme. Watkins subsequently became a government informant, and on February 14, 1978, she tape-recorded a conversation between herself and Lee Allen in which he discussed the Tindall-Rinden-Mendelow kickback transactions.
In early March 1980, after more than two years of investigation, the government presented the grand jury with its case against the defendants. The grand jury reviewed evidence of the defendants’ transactions with Tindall, Rinden, and Mendelow. On March 19, it returned an indictment against Lilly, Tindall, and the defendants. The indictment presented to the grand jury and returned by it did not charge Rinden or Mendelow, and it did not mention their participation in the scheme.
The indictment charged in Count 1 that Lilly, Tindall, and the defendants had violated 18 U.S.C. § 371 by participating in a conspiracy to commit mail fraud. The goal of the conspiracy was allegedly “to devise a scheme (i) to defraud Hughes Aircraft Company of money and property, . . . (ii) to defraud Hughes ... of its right to the ... honest services of defendant Kenneth Lilly .. ., and (iii) to obtain money and property by false and fraudulent pretenses.” 1980 Indictment at 3, ¶ 5. According to the indictment, the scheme to defraud Hughes commenced in November 1974 and continued until sometime in early 1978. The alleged scheme contemplated that Lilly would purchase certain requested supplies for Hughes from Tindall’s Company, Ti-Con Industries, Inc. (“Ti-Con”), at excessive, noncompetitive prices. To effect this plan, Lilly would mail a purchase order to Ti-Con, and, after shipping the supplies to Hughes, Ti-Con would mail a billing invoice to Hughes. In return for this favored business, Ti-Con, after payment by Hughes, would pay a commission to defendants by *301 periodically mailing a check to defendant Richard Allen’s consulting firm, Contemporary Associates, Inc. These payments were then channeled to defendant Lee Allen through his corporations, Greenleaf Corporation and Lee Allen and Company. The twelve overt acts alleged in the indictment specified actions taken by the conspirators to ensure Ti-Con of business with Hughes and included certain payments of Ti-Con to Contemporary Associates. The last overt act alleged was that on or about February 14, 1978, defendant Lee Allen met with Watkins, Lilly’s successor, and attempted to persuade her to join the conspiracy.
In addition to the conspiracy count, the indictment charged Lilly, Tindall, and the defendants with several substantive counts of mail fraud. Specifically, the defendants were charged with nineteen counts of aiding and abetting mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341.
Prior to trial, each of the alleged conspirators moved for a separate trial. In considering the motions for severance, the court requested that the government submit a detailed outline of the evidence it would present against each defendant at trial, including a list of witnesses. After a careful review of that evidence, the court granted Lilly’s motion to sever and denied the other motions, leaving Tindall and defendants to be tried jointly. Subsequent to the court’s ruling, the case against Tindall and the defendants proceeded to a trial by jury on June 30, 1980. One day into the trial, the government filed papers in support of calling an additional witness, Roger Rinden. The government sought to introduce his testimony to prove an act “identical” to that charged in the indictment — that Lilly and the defendants had also engaged in a mail fraud conspiracy with Rinden and Mendelow. 2 The government conceded that the decision to call Rinden was made belatedly, but attributed the delay to the fact that -it had not adequately catalogued the Rinden-Mendelow kickback transactions with the Tindall transactions. Nevertheless, the court denied the government’s request, stating that it was too late in the proceedings for the government to make this addition to its witness list. 3
At the trial, the government proceeded on the theory that defendants and Lilly had engaged in a single conspiracy with Tindall, Mendelow, and Rinden. Consistent with that theory, the court admitted evidence of the Rinden-Mendelow transactions as well as the Tindall transactions. 4 On July 8, *302 1980, the court granted defendant Richard Allen’s motion for judgment of acquittal as to all counts on the ground that the government had failed to prove his connection with the conspiracy and the mail fraud scheme as a matter of law. The jury found Tindall and defendant Lee Allen guilty on the conspiracy and substantive counts, 5 and Lilly, who was tried to the court, was also found guilty. Prior to sentencing, Lee Allen suffered a heart attack, and, on August 21, 1980, the court sentenced him to pay a fine and to serve a three-year probation term. Lee Allen did not appeal his convictions. Tindall and Lilly did seek review of their convictions, however, which were affirmed in a consolidated appeal on November 16, 1981.
On November 18, 1981, two days after the convictions were affirmed, the grand jury returned its second indictment against the defendants. That indictment, presently before the court, charges in Count 1 that defendants and their unindicted co-conspirators, Lilly, Rinden, and Mendelow, violated 18 U.S.C. § 371 by participating in a conspiracy to commit mail fraud. The indictment alleges that the defendants devised a scheme “to obtain money by means of false and fraudulent pretenses.” 1981 Indictment at 4, ¶ 7a. The goal of the scheme was “(i) to defraud Hughes of money ..., (ii) to defraud Hughes of certain nondisclosed profits .. ., (iii) to defraud Hughes of its right to have the company’s business . . . conducted by its employees ... honestly [and] impartially ..., and (iiii) to defraud Hughes of its right to the conscientious, loyal, [and] honest . .. services [of] ... Hughes employees.” Id. The conspiracy and scheme to defraud allegedly commenced in mid-1974 and continued until approximately April 1978. The indictment reveals that the Rinden-Mendelow scheme operated in the same manner as the scheme charged in the first indictment. 6 The forty overt acts alleged in the second indictment consist primarily of purchase orders mailed to the suppliers and payments made to Contemporary Associates, Inc. The last overt act alleged is that on or about February 14, 1978, defendant Lee Allen met with Watkins in an attempt to persuade her to join the conspiracy. In addition to the conspiracy count, the indictment also charges defendants with eleven substantive counts of mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341.
The second indictment was assigned to the Honorable Malcolm M. Lucas of the Central District of California. Defendants promptly moved to transfer the case to this court on the grounds that the indictment should be dismissed pursuant to the double jeopardy clause or the court’s supervisory power and that, because of the similarity of the indictments, this court would be in a better position to decide those issues. The government opposed the transfer on the ground that the indictments involved different transactions. Despite that opposition, however, the case was transferred to this court in mid-December 1981.
In opposing defendants’ motions to dismiss, the government points out that it now *303 has a stronger case against defendants than it had at the time of the first trial. 7 Indeed, the government admits that soon after the court granted Richard Allen’s motion for judgment of acquittal, it subpoenaed additional documents from him in order to avoid a similar result in any future cases. 8 As the following discussion indicates, however, the double jeopardy clause and the court’s supervisory power exist for the very purpose of preventing the government from proceeding as it has in this case.
II. DOUBLE JEOPARDY
“Throughout its history, the principle of double jeopardy has restricted both the government’s ability to place the criminally accused on trial and its power to punish the guilty. . . . The general function of the double jeopardy clause is to assure that the prosecution and punishment of an individual have the degrees of finality and fairness essential to administration of the criminal law.” Note,
A Definition of Punishment for Implementing the Double Jeopardy Clause’s Multiple-Punishment Prohibition,
90 Yale L.J. 632, 632, 634 (1981). In implementing the policies of the clause,
9
the Supreme Court has accorded defendants protection from multiple trials as well as multiple punishment for the same offense.
North Carolina v. Pearce,
A. The Conspiracy Count
The double jeopardy clause mandates that once a defendant has been convicted or acquitted of an offense, he cannot be tried again for that offense.
Pearce,
“[T]he principal test for determining whether two offenses are the same for pur
*304
poses of barring successive prosecutions [is the
Blockburger
test].”
Illinois v. Vitale,
Another possible method of analyzing the same-offense issue in the conspiracy context is set forth in
Kotteakos v. United States,
Neither
Kotteakos
nor
Blumenthal
was a double jeopardy case, and neither addressed the issue presented here — whether a given defendant is being tried twice for the same conspiracy. The issue in both cases concerned the presentation of evidence to the jury in multi-defendant conspiracy cases. For example, in
Kotteakos,
the Court analogized the structure of the conspiracy before it to a wheel. A single defendant at the center of the conspiracy, the “hub” defendant, dealt separately with each of several “spoke” defendants in a loan fraud scheme. Each spoke defendant processed his loans through the hub defendant without assistance from or knowledge of the other spoke defendants. The Court held that it was prejudicial on those facts for the trial court to instruct the jury that only a single conspiracy existed. Such an instruction permitted the jury to hold each spoke defendant accountable for the actions of the other spoke defendants and improperly allowed the jury to transfer the guilt of one defendant to another. Although the Court clearly found separate conspiracies between the spoke defendants for purposes of the presentation of evidence, it did not suggest that, for double jeopardy purposes, the single hub defendant could be indicted and tried on a separate charge of conspiracy as to each spoke defendant. As to him, there was but one conspiracy. Put simply, since the gravamen of conspiracy is the illegal agreement, the hub defendant (here, the Allens) may be guilty of only one conspiracy under the double jeopardy clause. This, of course, does not contradict or negate in any way the
Kotteakos
rule that one set of spoke defendants cannot be held for the statements or actions of any other set of spoke defendants.
See United States v. Castro,
In applying the
Braver man
rule against subdividing a single conspiracy, the Ninth Circuit has adopted a “factor analysis” to determine whether two conspiracies constitute the same offense. That analysis, commonly denoted the “totality of circumstances” test, requires the court to compare “the differences in the periods of time covered by the alleged conspiracies, the places where the conspiracies were alleged to occur, the persons charged as co-conspirators, the overt acts alleged to have been committed, and the statutes alleged to have been violated.”
United States v. Mayo,
Defendants have carried their burden of establishing that the two indictments allege but a single conspiracy.
See Sanchez v. United States,
In sum, although no single factor in the
Arnold
analysis should be solely determinative, in this case each factor strongly weighs in favor of finding a single conspiratorial agreement. Significantly, the indictments themselves allege the same purpose for the conspiracies — to defraud Hughes of money and the honest services of its employees. Moreover, at the first trial, the government assumed the existence of only one conspiracy,
see
note 4
supra,
conceding that the two sets of transactions were identical but for the difference in suppliers.
15
However, a difference in suppliers does not give rise to a separate conspiracy.
United States v. Castro,
Because a single conspiratorial agreement encompassed both the Tindall transactions and the Rinden-Mendelow transactions, the two indictments allege the same conspiracy. 16 Since defendants have been previously tried for that conspiracy, they may not be again placed in jeopardy for that offense.
B. The Substantive Counts
Having determined that a single conspiracy existed in this case, it necessarily follows that the substantive counts of the second indictment underlie the conspiracy for which defendants have already been tried. Of course, as a general rule a defendant can first be tried on a conspiracy count and then, in a separate trial, be prosecuted for the underlying substantive offense.
See United States v. Brooklier,
[I]f the government could have initially prosecuted a defendant for multiple offenses [in a single proceeding], further analysis is necessary if it charges him with only one and holds the others in reserve. Policies of assuring finality, *308 sparing defendants the financial and psychological burdens of repeated trials, preserving judicial resources, and preventing prosecutorial misuse of the indictment process all come into play.
United States v. Brooklier, supra,
Because of the substantial similarity between conspiracy to commit mail fraud and the substantive crime of mail fraud, the court finds that the double jeopardy clause also bars defendants’ prosecution on the new substantive counts.
1. Collateral Estoppel
The relationship between the statutory elements of conspiracy, 18 U.S.C. § 371, and those of mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, is unique.
19
Conspiracy in general requires an agreement among two or more persons to commit some substantive offense.
United States v. Friedman,
In Ashe, the government believed the defendant guilty of robbing each of six men engaged in a poker game. Instead of charging the defendant in a single proceeding with robbing all six players, the government brought the defendant to trial for robbing only one of them. The evidence at trial proved that a robbery had occurred and that the particular victim in question had been robbed. It was also clear that the same persons had robbed each of the players. The trial ended in a judgment of acquittal. Subsequently, the government tried the defendant for robbing a different player and obtained a conviction. On appeal, the Supreme Court reversed. The Court found that the first jury’s verdict of acquittal established that the defendant was not one of the robbers. Since that fact had been determined in the defendant’s favor at the first trial, the government could not seek to litigate the issue a second time.
In the case at bar, the government, having failed at the previous trial to prove Richard Allen’s involvement in the scheme to defraud, now seeks to relitigate that issue through the new substantive counts. Under the rule established in
Ashe,
it may not do so, however. The government is collaterally estopped from seeking to prove a second time Richard’s connection to that scheme. This result prevents the government from using the first trial as a dry run for subsequent prosecutions, improving its case with each successive trial.
See
Collateral estoppel, of course, does not bar defendant Lee Allen’s prosecution on the new substantive counts since his first trial resulted in a conviction,
i.e.,
his connection with the agreement to defraud was proved.
See Brown v. Ohio,
2. Compulsory Joinder
The Supreme Court has recognized that two offenses may be so similar in terms of proof that they should be joined in a single proceeding. Failure to join such offenses precludes the government from trying a defendant on the charges omitted from the first trial. Here, the substantive counts in the second indictment are so similar to the offenses previously tried that the rule of compulsory joinder should apply. Thus, neither defendant can be prosecuted on those counts.
a. Comparison of the New Substantive Counts to the Conspiracy Count
As previously noted, it is generally held that a conspiracy count and its underlying *310 substantive counts can be tried separately. However, this general rule does not appear to have been analyzed in the context of separate trials for mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and conspiracy to commit mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 371. In this case, after engaging in such an analysis, the court has concluded that the substantial identity of those two offenses compels the rejection of the general rule and instead requires application of the rule of compulsory joinder.
Since the double jeopardy issue presented here involves successive prosecutions under two distinct statutory provisions, 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 1341, the
Blockburger
standard is the primary test for determining whether mail fraud must be tried with conspiracy to commit mail fraud.
See Illinois v. Vitale,
It is true that the evidence presented at the first trial on the conspiracy and substantive counts would not suffice to prove the new substantive counts; the latter involve mailings different from those at the first trial. However, the evidence required to prove the new substantive counts would, of necessity, reprove the conspiracy count already prosecuted.
22
Consequently,
*311
the actual-evidence test mandates that, at least on the facts of this case, the conspiracy count and the substantive counts be tried simultaneously. It follows that since defendants have already been prosecuted for the conspiracy, they cannot be tried on the mail fraud counts. The order of the trials is immaterial; the rule of compulsory joinder applies even though the conspiracy was tried first.
Vitale,
In sum, the actual-evidence test required the government to pursue all mail fraud charges against the defendants at the time it brought the initial conspiracy count. This is not to say, however, that every conspiracy to commit mail fraud must be tried with its underlying substantive counts, for the facts of another case may not require compulsory joinder. It should also be noted that the compulsory joinder rule announced here is of limited significance outside the mail fraud context. Where mail fraud is not involved, the proof required for the substantive offense will typically not include proof of the conspiracy. Thus, requiring the government to join Section 371 and Section 1341 offenses in a single proceeding simply recognizes a narrow exception to the general rule permitting separate trials on the conspiracy and substantive counts.
b. Comparison of the New Substantive Counts to the Previously Tried Substantive Counts
The preceding discussion analyzed the relationship between mail fraud and conspiracy to commit mail fraud and concluded that those offenses must be tried simultaneously. However, even if the defendants had not been tried for conspiracy at the previous trial, their prosecution on the substantive counts alone would act as a bar to trial on the new substantive counts. Since the two indictments allege but a single scheme to defraud, it follows that the nineteen substantive counts (i.e., mailings) alleged in the first indictment and the eleven alleged in the second indictment are all part of the same ongoing scheme. No doubt each of those thirty mailings is separately punishable.
See, e.g., United States v. Crockett,
Mail fraud requires proof of a scheme to defraud and knowing use of the mails to execute the scheme.
United States v. Beecroft,
The rationale underlying the double jeopardy ban on successive trials is best described in an oft-quoted passage from
Green v. United States,
The constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy was designed to protect an individual from being subjected to the hazards of trial and possible conviction more than once for an alleged offense. .. . The underlying idea ... is that the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity as well as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be found guilty.
To date, the Supreme Court has employed two different tests in applying the ban on successive trials: the same-required-evidence test announced in
Blockburger
and the same-actual-evidence test used in
Vitale.
Both of those tests would permit successive trials for mail fraud. Since each mail fraud count involves a distinct mailing, each count requires proof of a fact not required by the other. Similarly, the actual evidence required to prove a particular mailing would not establish any other mailing. Application of these two tests should not exhaust the analysis, however.
See Brown, supra,
In
Brown,
the Court held that greater and lesser included offenses must be tried together, basing its decision on the
Blockburger
test.
26
This joinder rule is easily understood where the defendant has
*313
been first tried for the greater offense and convicted. In. that situation, the punishment for the greater offense necessarily includes the penalty for the lesser offense.
See
Westen & Drubel,
Toward a General Theory of Double Jeopardy,
1978 Sup.Ct. Rev. 81, 157-59 & 158 n.332 [hereinafter
Double Jeopardy
Theory]. Since the lesser offense is not separately punishable, it is not separately triable.
Brown,
In the case at bar, a common core of fact — the scheme to defraud — connects all of the substantive counts. Indeed, that common core constitutes the principal element of proof in each separate count. Since the mail fraud counts in the two indictments have such a significant core of fact in common, the rationale of Brown should require their joinder in a single trial.
Additional support for a compulsory joinder rule in the mail fraud context is found in
In re Nielsen,
Nielsen
and
Brown
require that two separately punishable offenses be tried together if they have a significant core of fact in common.
30
“It has long been under
*315
stood that separate statutory crimes need not be identical — either in constituent elements or in actual proof — -in order to be the same within the meaning of the constitutional prohibition [on successive trials].”
Brown,
In sum, the double jeopardy clause requires dismissal of the second indictment. Since the conspiracies charged in the two indictments are the same conspiracy, neither defendant can be retried for that offense. Further, Richard Allen’s acquittal at the previous trial precludes the government from trying him on the new substantive counts. Finally, the rule of compulsory joinder bars both defendants’ prosecution on those counts.
C. Waiver
The government contends that even if the double jeopardy clause would otherwise bar the second trial, that is, even if the indictments allege the same conspiracy and scheme to defraud, defendants waived their double jeopardy rights during the investigative stage of this case by misleading investigators. According to this argument, even where a single conspiracy is present, the government may try a defendant repeatedly for that offense if, during the criminal investigation, he denied participation in the conspiracy and advised his co-conspirators to do the same. This contention is unsound in both law and fact.
The government argues that the defendants waived their rights not to be tried on the second indictment because they: (1) denied participation in the kickback scheme to investigators; (2) advised Lilly and Tindall to “keep quiet” during the investigation; and (3) told Rinden that the investigation might “blow over.” These actions allegedly made it more difficult for the government to gather evidence against the defendants. However, assuming that such a waiver theory is to be recognized, the facts of this case do not warrant its application to defendants. “ ‘Waiver’ is a vague term used for a great variety of purposes, good and bad, in the law. In any normal sense, however, it connotes some kind of voluntary knowing relinquishment of a right.”
Green, supra,
During the investigation, the defendants denied involvement in any kickback scheme, and their denials drew no distinctions between Tindall and Rinden/Mendelow. Similarly, any statements Lee Allen may have made to Lilly advising him to “keep quiet” were made in general terms, with no mention of any particular Hughes supplier. Further, any effort Richard Allen may have made to keep Tindall quiet does not suggest a waiver with respect to the Rinden-Mendelow transactions. Indeed, Tindall had nothing to do with those transactions. Finally, there is no evidence that defendants took any steps at all to cover up the Rinden-Mendelow portion of the scheme in particular. Richard Allen’s alleged comments to Rinden to the effect that the investigation might “blow over” is hardly an instruction that he mislead investigators. If anything, the evidence suggests that defendants concentrated their efforts on covering up the Tindall portion of the conspiracy. However, such conduct is not a basis for concluding that defendants’ actions evidenced an intent to permit a subsequent trial on the Rinden-Mendelow transactions. 31 Since defendants devoted no particular effort to concealing the Rinden-Mendelow portion of the scheme, they did not waive their right to be tried only once for that scheme 32
The government’s waiver theory misconstrues the law of double jeopardy as well as the facts of this case. The Supreme Court has consistently rejected the application of waiver theories in the double jeopardy area.
See Green, supra,
Moreover, since some concealment inheres in virtually every crime, acceptance of the waiver theory would potentially deprive every defendant of the benefits of the double jeopardy clause, and for this reason alone, it must be rejected.
See Grunewald v. United States,
[Ajfter the central criminal purposes of a conspiracy have been attained, a subsidiary conspiracy to conceal may not be implied from circumstantial evidence showing merely that the conspiracy was kept a secret and that the conspirators took care to cover up their crime in order to escape detection and punishment. . . . For every conspiracy is by its very nature secret.... [Ejvery conspiracy will inevitably be followed by action taken to cover the conspirators’ traces. Sanctioning the Government’s theory would for all practical purposes wipe out the statute of limitations in conspiracy cases... .
Finally, acceptance of the waiver theory would encourage the government to institute prosecutions prematurely, that is, before sufficient evidence is gathered, a result which the court must avoid. See
United States v. Lovasco,
Similar to its waiver argument is the government’s claim that prosecution on the new substantive counts is permitted under the “due diligence” exception to the compulsory joinder rule. The Supreme Court has recognized that an exception to compulsory joinder “may exist where the State is unable to proceed on the more serious charge at the outset because the additional facts necessary to sustain that charge .. . have not been discovered despite due diligence.”
Brown, supra,
*319
The government rests its “due diligence” argument on the fact that it was still investigating the new substantive counts at the time it brought the first indictment; although the investigation of the Tindall transactions had concluded, investigators were continuing to gather evidence of the Rinden-Mendelow transactions. Lack of proof, however, does not invoke the due diligence exception. That exception applies only if, at the time of the first trial, the government was not
aware
of the offenses which it failed to join.
See Vitale,
In this case, the government unquestionably had knowledge of the facts underlying the new substantive counts at the time it sought the first indictment. The government was aware throughout its investigation that the conspiracy and mail fraud scheme included transactions with Rinden and Mendelow. Indeed, it concedes as much, stating that the prosecutor decided prior to the first indictment to prosecute defendants separately on the Rinden-Mendelow portion of the scheme. That decision, as the court holds today, was not consistent with the commands of the double jeopardy clause, and it is not made valid by the fact that the government’s investigation into that portion of the scheme was continuing. The government should have delayed prosecution on the charges in the first indictment until such time as it was prepared to pursue the substantive counts of the second indictment. 39
III. SUPERVISORY POWER
“All federal courts are endowed with certain inherent supervisory powers over the administration of justice in the courts of the United States and must utilize that power, which comprehends the power to dismiss an indictment, whenever the pursuit of truth and justice becomes tainted.”
United States v. Butler,
In McNabb, the defendants were suspected of murdering a federal agent. Without taking the defendants before a committing judicial officer, which was statutorily required, investigators detained them for two days, subjecting them to intensive questioning. During the interrogation, each of the three defendants made incriminating statements, which were subsequently used in convicting them of second-degree murder. They appealed their convictions, and the court of appeals affirmed. Before the Supreme Court, the defendants argued that the trial court violated their Fifth Amendment rights by admitting the incriminating statements. In reversing the convictions, the Court declined to reach the constitutional issue, stating that
the scope of our reviewing power over convictions brought here from the federal courts is not confined to ascertainment of *320 Constitutional validity. Judicial supervision of the administration of criminal justice in the federal courts implies the duty of establishing and maintaining civilized standards of procedure and evidence.
... [A] decent regard for the duty of courts as agencies of justice and custodians of liberty forbids that men should be convicted upon evidence secured under the circumstances revealed here.
Subsequent to
McNabb,
the Court has invoked its supervisory power to reverse convictions based on the discredited testimony of a government informant,
Mesarosh v. United States,
Although the case law indicates that, in using its supervisory power, the court should tailor the remedy to the injury, it is clear that dismissal of the indictment, where appropriate, is one of the remedies which may be employed.
See United States v. Samango,
*321
Dismissal of an indictment pursuant to the court’s supervisory power may be appropriate where the indictment charges an offense nearly identical to one previously tried.
Guido v. United States,
On appeal, defendants renewed their constitutional challenges to the indictment. The Ninth Circuit declined to reach those claims, however, reversing the convictions under its supervisory power instead. The court compared the two conspiracies and concluded that they involved the same objectives, the same key participants (the defendants), the same method of operation, and the same period of time. Although the conspiracies were separately punishable,
see United States v. Burkett,
Guido provides strong support for dismissing the indictment in this case. Even if the conspiracy offenses charged in the two indictments are separately punishable, they are virtually identical in terms of proof. The only distinction between the conspiracies charged is a difference in the supplier to Hughes, a factor which the Guido court did not consider significant. More importantly, both conspiracies involve the same purpose, to defraud Hughes, a factor which the court did find significant in Guido. Further, as in Guido, the prosecutor knew about the two conspiracies when the decision was made to seek separate prosecutions. Thus, Guido’s holding — that two separate conspiracies, identical but for a minor difference in participants, must be tried together — applies with full force here. Prosecution under the second indictment would result in unnecessary harassment of the defendants, and the court must not permit such an injustice.
As to the substantive counts, Guido also compels dismissal. The new mail fraud counts are virtually identical to the new conspiracy count; indeed, every mailing alleged under Section 1341 is also alleged as an overt act of the conspiracy. The same facts underlie both the substantive counts and the conspiracy, and therefore Guido would require joinder of those offenses. Since the new conspiracy count should have been joined in the first indictment, it follows that the new substantive counts should also have been joined.
Alternatively, the substantial similarity between the substantive counts in the two indictments warrants dismissal of the new counts. Permitting separate trials on mailings connected by the same scheme to defraud would be grossly unjust.
Although the similarity of the indictments alone is sufficient to permit dismissal of the second indictment, additional factors also make that remedy appropriate. Having carefully reviewed the procedural history of this case, the court is compelled to conclude that, from the oütset, the government viewed the previous trial as a dry run for later cases. Apparently dissatisfied
*322
with the results of that prosecution, it wasted no time in strengthening its case against the defendants. The prosecutor now has additional documents and witnesses — one of whom, Tindall, was convicted in the previous trial — to bolster his case. Further, it is clear that the previous prosecution was initiated prematurely, obviously before the government was fully prepared to try its whole case. The government’s last-minute effort to introduce Rinden’s testimony against the defendants, the lack of substantial evidence connecting Richard Allen with the conspiracy, and the circumstances surrounding the return of the first indictment
41
all support that conclusion. Given that the offenses charged in the second indictment are nearly identical to those previously tried, the court concludes that further prosecution of defendants would be oppressive. The government’s failure to “act with due regard for the integrity of the administration of justice,”
United States v. Basurto,
CONCLUSION
The retrial prohibition of the double jeopardy clause requires dismissal of the indictment. Defendants cannot be tried on the conspiracy count since they have already been tried for that offense. Further, the doctrine of collateral estoppel precludes the government from litigating the substantive counts as to defendant Richard Allen. Finally, the rule of compulsory joinder requires dismissal of the substantive counts as to both defendants. The fact that defendants may have acted to conceal their criminal activity does not constitute a waiver of double jeopardy protection. Nor is the government excused from joining offenses under the compulsory joinder rule simply because its separate investigations into those offenses did not end simultaneously.
Alternatively, the court dismisses the indictment pursuant to its supervisory power over the administration of justice. Prosecution under the second indictment would result in manifest injustice in light of the similarity of the two indictments and the circumstances surrounding the previous trial.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that the indictment be dismissed with prejudice.
Notes
. Tindall was president of Ti-Con Industries, Inc. Rinden and Mendelow were co-owners of Trans American Plastics Corporation (“Trans American”), and Mendelow separately operated Diversified Engineering and a branch office of E. D. P. Industries, Inc.
. The government sought to introduce Rinden’s testimony pursuant to Rule 404(b), Fed.R.Evid., which provides that “[e]vidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts . . . may ... be admissible ... [to prove] motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.”
. The government also made a belated request to introduce certain statements made by Richard Allen to a government investigator on May 19, 1978. The court denied the request after the government conceded that it had previously represented to the court that the statements would not be used:
THE COURT: [W]as there a representation by the government before that they were going to use those statements?
MR. DEIXLER: My understanding, your Honor, is that ... [the government] represented to the Court in connection with the severance motion that . . . [many] of the statements which we would like to introduce at this time would not be introduced.
THE COURT: That’s correct. MR. DEIXLER: Since that time, your Honor, the government’s view of the case has changed and at this time the government would like to introduce those statements into evidence.
THE COURT: Well, my problem, Mr. Deixler, is that I made a whole series of decisions in this case, very difficult ones, based on representations about what statements were going to be used ....
... I would have done something totally different on the severance matter, I think, if [some of these statements had been offered earlier].
MR. DEIXLER: .. . What has occurred here, [due] . . . perhaps [to] a strategy decision which the government regrets making, is that—
THE COURT: ... [I]t’s been made, and it will be lived up to. That’s it.
Trial Transcript [“Tr.”] at 752-53, 758, 759.
. Although the court did not permit Rinden to testify, thereby foreclosing one source of evidence of the Rinden-Mendelow transactions, the government successfully sought to introduce evidence of those transactions through *302 Watkins’ testimony. Preliminary to the admission of that evidence, when asked by the court to explain the relevance of Watkins’ testimony about Trans American, the prosecutor stated:
That [company] is absolutely relevant. It comes up on the ... [tape recording of the February 14, 1978 conversation between Lee Allen and Watkins], your Honor, and is repeatedly discussed by Mr. Tindall and Mr. Allen to demonstrate to Miss Watkins the scope of the scheme. It is absolutely relevant to Lee Allen’s knowledge and the operation of the .. . [kickback] scheme which he describes in great detail on the tape.
It absolutely puts into context the operation of the entire conspiracy. It is completely relevant to the case.
Tr. at 871 (emphasis added).
. On July 9, 1980, the day before the case was submitted to the jury, the court entered judgments of acquittal in favor of Allen and Tindall on several of the mail fraud counts (five as to Allen, six as to Tindall).
. Of course, the indictment makes no mention of Ti-Con, Tindall’s company, but instead focuses on kickback transactions with Trans American and with Mendelow’s two companies. See note 1 supra. The overt acts of the conspiracy count make clear, however, that the indictment is principally concerned with Trans American’s role in the conspiracy as opposed to that of the other two suppliers.
. At the second trial, the government would call Rinden and Tindall as witnesses, neither of whom testified against defendants at the previous trial.
. At the previous trial, the government sought to connect Richard Allen with the conspiracy through the use of checks sent to Contemporary Associates, Richard’s company, from Ti-Con and through checks sent from Contemporary Associates to Lee Allen. The court found that those checks, without more, were insufficient as a matter of law to link Richard to the conspiracy, and it acquitted him. Approximately one month after the trial, the government subpoenaed additional documents from Richard Allen for reasons best explained by the government agent in charge of the investigation:
I realized that since the government had not yet obtained a complete record of ... [the Contemporary Associates] checks and deposits, [Richard Allen’s connection to the conspiracy] .. . was a confusing issue during the Tindall conspiracy trial and in view of this I decided to subpoena additional records from .. . [him] that could be used along with the incomplete records I had previously obtained from the banks where the Contemporary Associates accounts were located, to overcome a similar [acquittal] argument in the later cases ....
Government Declarations Re Investigation and Indictment at 19 (filed Feb. 1, 1982).
. The clause provides that no person shall “be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” U.S.Const.Amend. V.
. Determining what constitutes the “same offense” has proved the most difficult and most frequently litigated double jeopardy issue. See Note, The Double Jeopardy Clause as a Bar to Reintroducing Evidence, 89 Yale L.J. 962, 963-69 (1980) (discussing various same-offense tests).
. In
United States v. Brooklier,
. It appears that the Tenth Circuit stands alone in applying
Kotteakos
in the double jeopardy context.
Compare United States v. McMurray,
. Although the indictments allege that the first conspiracy ended in February 1978 and that the second conspiracy ended in April 1978, the last overt act alleged for both conspiracies occurred on February 14, 1978.
. It is also important that several of the overt acts alleged in the indictments, though not the same exact acts, are of similar character. For example, both conspiracies involved purchase orders mailed by Lilly as well as payments made to Contemporary Associates. Such similarity further indicates the singleness of the conspiracies. It should not be necessary for purposes of the Arnold analysis that the overt acts in the indictments be precisely the same acts. Indeed, many distinct overt acts may further a single conspiracy, as the first indictment itself demonstrates. Obviously, where the two indictments involve different suppliers, the prosecutor can easily avoid alleging the same overt acts. In that type of situation, if the Arnold factor of comparing overt acts is to have any distinction from the factor of comparing the conspirators involved, the overt acts should be compared to determine whether they are strikingly similar rather than whether they are identical.
. When the government attempted to add Rinden to its witness list, the prosecutor stated that “Mr. Rinden .. . would essentially say that he was involved in an identical scheme. He played the role of Mr. Tindall, the only difference between the schemes.” Tr. at 764.
. Having concluded that the indictments allege the same conspiracy, it follows that the two sets of transactions are simply alternative sources of evidence Underlying a single offense. Thus, the government would have faced no preindictment delay problems in deferring prosecution of the conspiracy until such time as its investigations into both sets of transactions had concluded. The fact that the investigation into the Tindall transactions concluded before all the evidence was gathered on the Rinden-Mendelow transactions does not justify separate prosecutions.
See United States v. Lovasco,
Additionally, the government cannot now be heard to complain that had it initially joined the two sets of transactions in one indictment, defendants
might
have moved for severance. Such hypothetical do not aid in the analysis of double jeopardy problems since “[ljegal consequences ordinarily flow from what has actually happened, not from what a party might have done from the vantage of hindsight.”
Sanabria v. United States,
. If Congress intended a defendant’s actions to be punishable as two separate offenses, then the double jeopardy clause does not prevent the imposition of multiple sentences. See
Albernaz v. United States,
. The fact that, under the double jeopardy clause, a defendant’s criminal activity may give rise to multiple sentences but only a single trial simply recognizes that the “same offense” concept changes from the multiple-punishment context to the retrial area. In the former, the clause ensures that the court imposes punishment consistent with legislative intent; in the retrial area, it serves a constitutional policy of finality for the defendant’s benefit, protecting him from the burdens of the trial process itself.
See Brown v. Ohio,
. The general federal conspiracy statute provides:
If two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense against the United States, or to defraud the United States, . . . and one or more of such persons do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, each shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
The mail fraud statute provides;
Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, ... for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice . .. places in any post office ... any matter or thing whatever to be sent or delivered by the Postal Service, or takes or receives therefrom, any such matter or thing, or knowingly causes to be delivered by mail . . . any such matter or thing, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
. The government’s opening and closing statements at the previous trial also illustrate that the conspiratorial agreement is the scheme to defraud. At the outset of her opening statement, the prosecutor told the jury that “this is a conspiracy case,” Tr. at 263, and she then proceeded to describe the operation of that conspiracy. Significantly, when the prosecutor moved on to discuss the mail fraud scheme, she remarked, “[fjor .. . mail fraud . .. you have to have a scheme to defraud and you have to have something mail[ed] in the United States Mail in furtherance of the scheme to defraud. . .. The scheme to defraud, I have already outlined to you .. . . ” Tr. at 274-75. Similarly, in the closing argument, the prosecutor explained the elements of conspiracy and *309 mail fraud. After describing Count 1, the conspiracy count, she introduced the substantive charges, saying, “[n]ow let’s break these down into . .. [their] elements. First of all, a scheme to defraud. This goes back to what I read to you in the Count 1 .... ” Tr. at 1397.
.
Vitale, Jordan,
and
Sabella
all relied on
Nielsen
in employing the actual-evidence test.
Nielsen,
in turn, borrowed the test from its original source,
Morey
v.
Commonwealth,
. The elements of mail fraud are a scheme to defraud and knowing use of the mails in furtherance of the scheme.
United States v. Beecroft,
. The trial transcript, from preliminary statements to jury instructions, including transcriptions of the two tape recordings played to the jury, consists of approximately 1,485 pages. Only sixty-three of those pages concern the issue of use of the mails.
. An examination of the overt acts alleged in the conspiracy count of the second indictment reveals that there are a number of additional mailings which could be made the basis of still more Section 1341 charges. See 1981 Indictment at 17, 18, ¶¶ D.14.dd, ee, gg.
. Even now it is not clear if this will be defendants’ last prosecution on the mail fraud scheme. See note 24 supra. In this respect it is interesting to note that the second indictment, against only the defendants, was not handed down until after Lilly’s convictions were affirmed on appeal; no doubt he, too, could have been charged in the second indictment.
. The defendant in Brown was initially tried and convicted for the offense of joyriding — taking or operating a car without the owner’s consent. He was then charged and convicted for auto theft, which consisted of joyriding with the intent permanently to deprive the owner of possession. Thus, the only difference between the offenses was that auto theft required proof of an additional fact, the defendant’s intent. Applying the Blockburger test, *313 the Court determined that joyriding and auto theft were but one constitutional offense for purposes of trial:
As is invariably true of a greater and lesser included offense, the lesser offense — joyriding — requires no proof beyond that which is required for conviction of the greater — auto theft. The greater offense is therefore by definition the “same” for purposes of double jeopardy as any lesser offense included in it.
.
Blockburger
is not an end in itself but is simply a means of resolving the particular double jeopardy issue before the court. For example, in the multiple-punishment context, where
Blockburger’s
purpose is to discern legislative intent,
see
notes 17 & 18
supra,
the Court has recently noted that that test need not be followed if Congress has otherwise made its purpose known.
See Albernaz v. United States,
. Although the Court in Brown relied on Nielsen, it based its decision on Blockburger:
Because we conclude today that a lesser included and a greater offense are the same under Blockburger, we need not decide whether the repetition of proof required by the successive prosecutions against Brown would otherwise entitle him to the additional protection offered by ... Nielsen.
It should be noted that in applying
Blockburger
in the multiple-punishment area, the Court has stated that “[i]f each [offense] requires proof of a fact that the other does not, . .. [multiple sentences are permissible]
notwithstanding a substantial overlap in the proof
offered to establish the crimes.”
Ianelli v. United
states,
. The first indictment charged defendants with aiding and abetting mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 1341, while the second indictment charges them simply with mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341. Nevertheless, the second trial would still expose defendants to a repetition of proof, since, in proving aiding and abetting at the previous trial, the government had to, and did, litigate the scheme to defraud.
See United States v. Ruffin,
. The compulsory joinder rule announced here is to be distinguished from the “same transaction” test, which has never been explicitly approved or disapproved by the Supreme Court. That test requires “prosecution in one proceeding ... of ‘all the charges against a defendant that grow out of a single criminal act, occurrence, episode, or transaction.’ ”
Brown,
. The government’s argument assumes that, absent waiver, a second trial would be impermissible under the double jeopardy clause. The basis of the waiver theory is that a defendant, by actively misleading investigators, increases the government’s burden of proving his guilt and that a guilty defendant should not be permitted to escape punishment under such circumstances. Thus, the theory appears to have no application to Lee Allen since he was convicted at the previous trial.
. Since the Rinden-Mendelow transactions underlie both the conspiracy count and the substantive counts, the court’s conclusion on the waiver issue applies to the entire indictment.
. The government’s suggestion that Richard Allen waived his double jeopardy rights by denying his participation in the conspiracy seems most odd in light of the fact that he was acquitted at the previous trial.
. While Grünewald dealt only with conspiracy, its observations apply equally to multi-party mail fraud schemes.
. Of course, a defendant’s acts of concealment at some point may so interfere with the administration of justice that they will become criminal acts themselves. See 18 U.S.C. § 1503 (obstruction of justice). Indeed, in Grünewald, one of the defendants was convicted for attempting to influence witnesses appearing before the grand jury.
. The government has admitted that “[t]he only such evidence [linking Richard Allen to the conspiracy] which arguably was available in 1980 was the testimony of Rinden. ... [He] did not disclose to the government until June 25, 1980 that he could testify to direct conversations with Richard Allen in which Allen delineated the corrupt and illicit purposes of the payments from suppliers.” Government’s Petition for Rehearing at 33-34 (filed Feb. 26, 1982).
. As support for its waiver theory, the government relies on cases permitting a second trial where the defendant’s conduct has necessitated the early termination of the first trial.
See, e.g., United States v. Mastrangelo,
. The exception, even if applicable, would not permit a second prosecution on the conspiracy. The cases suggesting the existence of the due diligence exception have done so only in the context of compulsory joinder, that is, where the offenses at issue are separately punishable. Indeed, where the government is seeking to try a defendant a second time for the same punishable offense, the double jeopardy clause bars the second trial primarily to prevent the government from presenting facts which it did not use at the first trial.
See Burks v. United States,
. Since the separate mail fraud counts constitute a single offense for purposes of trial, the government would not have faced any preindictment delay problems in trying all thirty mailings at the time of the second indictment. The government’s continuing investigation into some of those mailings permitted a delay in prosecution on those counts already investigated. See Lovasco v.
United States,
An exception to joinder in the mail fraud context may exist where the statute of limitations is about to run on some of the mailings. Such an exception would not justify the separate prosecutions in this case, however. Indeed, the mailings in the first indictment covered the same time period as those in the subsequent indictment.
. As noted in
McNabb,
the scope of the court’s supervisory power is not confined to the reach of the Constitution.
Accord, United States v. Cortina,
. The prosecutor in charge of the conspiracy case, after deciding to seek multiple indictments, presented the first indictment to the grand jury on the final day of its sitting. The government has explained the decision to seek multiple indictments and the resulting rush to the grand jury as follows:
[The prosecutor], who was pregnant at the time [the first indictment was sought] and due to deliver, had a choice to make. .. . Should she indict ... [the Ti-Con] case, which was completed, ... or should she defer until the time when the other investigations were done.
I mean, she might have had to restart with another grand jury, but it could have been done. 1 think that is simply a decision that prosecutors come to. I don’t read anything vindictive into that. She felt it was a separate case.
Transcript of Proceedings on the Motion to Dismiss at 30-31.
. Nothing in
United States v. Payner,
Nor does the court accept the government’s contention that defendants’ alleged acts of concealment deprive them of the protection afforded by the supervisory power. The court’s resolution of this waiver argument in the double jeopardy context, see Part II.C. supra, applies equally to the exercise of the supervisory power.
